TOURS

Sides of a Horn shows both sides to poaching war

In 2016, while travelling in South Africa, Writer and Director,
Toby Wosskow found himself lost in the natural beauty of the game reserves and
the wildlife who call it home.

“One afternoon, I was walking through the bush with a game
ranger, when we stumbled across a white rhino peacefully grazing. What struck
me more than the animal’s vicious beauty was that this scene could have been
taking place 50 million years ago or today. I was looking at a living,
breathing time machine in a land that time forgot. However, the magic of that
moment was tainted when I quickly learned that this magnificent creature was
being massacred to the brink of extinction.”

Toby felt a responsibility to expose the social impact of
the illegal wildlife trade and humanize the men and women who are so
devastatingly affected, thus the idea for Side of a Horn was born.

Written and Directed by Toby Wosskow, from Executive
Producer Sir Richard Branson, Side of a
Horn is the first film to tell the story of Africa’s poaching war from both
sides of the fence.

Based on actual events and filmed in one of the communities
most directly impacted by wildlife crime, it follows the journey of two brothers-in-law
fighting on opposite sides of Africa’s poaching war. This dramatic short film paints
an unbiased portrait of a modern war that is tearing communities apart and
driving a prehistoric species to the verge of extinction.

“A nonsensical demand for rhino horn in parts of Asia is
fuelling a poaching war on the ground in South Africa. International crime
syndicates are preying on the most financially-desperate people living around
protected areas, and offering them a fraction of the overseas profits to poach
from their own wildlife. Meanwhile, other people in these same rural
communities are taking the legitimate path of becoming anti-poaching rangers
and putting their lives on the line to protect their wildlife heritage. These
men and women from the same communities are killing each other, along with
their iconic rhino, to feed an unnecessary demand on the other side of the
world.”

After returning to the US, Toby continued researching and
found that there was a fair amount of international media coverage about the
multi-billion dollar illegal wildlife trade, but nobody was talking about the
communities on the ground who were being torn apart by this war.

“My objective as a filmmaker became clear. I felt a
responsibility to expose the social impact of the illegal wildlife trade and
humanize the men and women who are so devastatingly affected. I developed a
dramatic short film, based on actual events, that explores how two people from
the same level of poverty, the same community, and even the same family can end
up on opposite sides of this war.”

Toby says the poaching crisis is a complex issue and the
conversation around it must go beyond simple right and wrong.

“By painting an unbiased portrait of this modern war and
exposing both sides of the struggle, it is my hope that sides of a horn will be
a catalyst that inspires a greater discussion that can lead to positive change.
The human death toll is rising, and the rhino is facing extinction within the
next decade. One strength of the short film medium is the ability to tell
vital, urgent stories, and this story is as urgent as they come.”